The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Renovation funded by private investors

Plans to create hotel suites approved by Perth and Kinross Council this week

- Jamie buchan jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

The renovation of a historic Highland Perthshire castle is being bankrolled by dozens of private investors in a scheme spearheade­d by an offshore firm based in Dubai, The Courier can reveal.

New plans to transform Taymouth Castle near Kenmore into a series of hotel suites were approved by Perth and Kinross Council this week.

Previous owners Meteor Asset Management spent about £23 million refurbishi­ng the A-listed building.

The Courier can reveal the castle, where Queen Victoria spent her honeymoon, has been bought by a new firm called Mount Two Limited, an offshore company based in the United Arab Emirates.

It is one of around 8,000 companies which has invested in the Ras Al Khaimah Free Trade Zone, about an hour’s drive from Dubai.

The area, establishe­d 17 years ago as a “cost effective investment destinatio­n”, offers a tax-free environmen­t and is 100% foreign-owned.

Its chairman is listed as His Highness Sheikh Ahmed bin Saqr Al Qasimi.

No one from Mount Two Limited could be reached for comment.

The restoratio­n has been backed by more than 70 investors, who have been described as co-owners.

Some of these investors live in the area and three of them even objected to Mount Two’s proposal for the reworked suites.

The group, the Highland Tay Investors Initiative, has its own private Facebook page.

In his letter of objection, Ollie Hawes, who lives in New Zealand, said he had invested in the east wing of the developmen­t, at a price of 13 shares per suite.

He said he and other investors had not been consulted about the latest proposals, which effectivel­y replace the consented 14 hotel suites with 23 smaller bedrooms.

Agents for Mount Two said in their submission to the local authority that the plan was “critical in terms of the new investor’s business plan to ensure the castle renovation and operation is financiall­y viable”.

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? The existing Taymouth Castle dates from the 19th Century.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. The existing Taymouth Castle dates from the 19th Century.
 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Queen Victoria spent her honeymoon at the castle.
Picture: Getty. Queen Victoria spent her honeymoon at the castle.

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